The Borneo Post

China factory growth unexpected­ly speeds up in August in further global boost

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BEIJING: Growth in China’s manufactur­ing sector unexpected­ly accelerate­d in August, suggesting the world’s second-largest economy is still expanding at a healthy clip despite rising financing costs and a cooling housing market.

Along with stronger US economic growth reported overnight, China’s official factory readings indicated the global economy remains on solid footing for now, despite concerns that growth may begin to fade in coming months.

China’s resilience has surprised economists so far this year and given an extra boost to a global recovery despite Beijing’s crackdown on riskier types of lending and ever-tougher curbs to get the overheated housing market under control.

The official Purchasing Managers’ Index ( PMI) released on Thursday rose to 51.7 in August from the previous month’s 51.4, confoundin­g economists’ expectatio­ns for a marginal decline.

Production, total new orders and business expectatio­ns all shifted into higher gear, with a separate survey showing activity in the steel industry hitting a record high thanks to a year-long, government-led constructi­on boom.

In particular, a sharp pick-up in input prices bodes well for resource companies’ earnings and investment in coming months, ANZ said.

“The price- driven recovery will continue at least in the third quarter”, said Raymond Yeung, Greater China chief economist for ANZ in Hong Kong.

“On the demand side, infrastruc­ture spending and fixed asset investment continue to maintain (at decent levels)...I see no reason for a sharp downturn even after the fourth quarter this year.”

The sustained rally in industrial commoditie­s’ prices largely reflects stronger demand for building materials and government efforts to reduce excess capacity by shutting inefficien­t and heavily polluting mines and mills.

Demand is so robust that futures prices for steel reinforcin­g bars used in constructi­on have surged 8 percent this month and more than 50 per cent this year.

Output prices also rose at the fastest pace since December, indicating strong pricing power for producers, which should fatten profit margins and give firms extra breathing room in the country’s fight against a rapid build-up in debt.

China’s economy grew by a faster-than- expected 6.9 per cent in the first half, with resurgent exports and robust retail sales adding to the momentum from an infrastruc­ture building spree and record lending by state- controlled banks last year.

China watchers still insist the economy will start to lose some steam eventually, as higher financing costs for companies and homeowners start to drag on activity.

But they do not foresee a sharp slowdown, especially as the government is keen to ensure stability ahead of a once-in-five-years Communist Party leadership reshuffle in the autumn. After a strong start to 2017, the government looks certain to comfortabl­y meet or beat its full-year growth target of around 6.5 per cent. ANZ is forecastin­g 6.7 per cent.

Analysts did note a number of areas that bear watching, includ- ing a slowdown in new export orders.

A separate official reading on China’s services sector showed expansion slowed to 53.4 in August from 54.5 in July, the slowest pace of growth since May 2016, but still comfortabl­y above a reading of 50, which separates growth from contractio­n. China’s leaders are counting on growth in services and consumptio­n to rebalance their economic growth model from its heavy reliance on investment and exports.

Slower growth was seen in the property and financial sectors, while the informatio­n technology, broadcasti­ng and aviation industries expanded strongly, the National Bureau of Statistics ( NBS) said in a statement along with the data.

A sub-index for the constructi­on sector fell to 58 in August from 62.5 in July.

While still quite robust, the lower reading may suggest the strong economic impulse from the massive government infrastruc­ture spending is starting to fade.

Data for July came in mostly below expectatio­ns as growth in imports faltered, while industrial output grew at the slowest pace since early this year.

“Looking ahead, if we are right to believe that tighter policy will continue to weigh on investment spending in the coming quarters, then we doubt that the current pace of industrial output growth can be sustained for long,” Capital Economics’ economist Julian Evans-Pritchard wrote in a note.

The data on Thursday showed manufactur­ers cranked up production in August, with a reading of 54.1 from 53.5 in July, while new factory orders rose to 53.1 from 52.8 in July. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Growth in China’s manufactur­ing sector unexpected­ly accelerate­d in August, suggesting the world’s second-largest economy is still expanding at a healthy clip despite rising financing costs and a cooling housing market. — Reuters photo
Growth in China’s manufactur­ing sector unexpected­ly accelerate­d in August, suggesting the world’s second-largest economy is still expanding at a healthy clip despite rising financing costs and a cooling housing market. — Reuters photo

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